Dialogue Ireland

External Links

Dialogue Ireland in its informative education programme in no way recommends or endorses any persons, or organizations on these links pages. We present them only as sources of information for researchers to consider about group-related concerns or questions.

THE Church of Scientology has been criticised after a propaganda video suggested it helped reduce Irish drug crime by 85pc.

Several businesses in Dublin have also hit out at the church for filming their premises as part of a video shown at a New Year’s Eve celebration in Clearwater, Florida.

The video, which is a presentation by Scientology leader David Miscavige, claims to show the work done by the controversial group around the world and includes a special feature on its efforts in Ireland.

It refers to Ireland as a country of “enduring beauty and beautiful sadness” but one that has “not been immune to decaying values of the 21st Century”.

The group, whose most famous member is Tom Cruise, has premises on Abbey Street in Dublin’s city centre where it has been ‘testing’ the public and also holding life-improvement classes.

In the video, the group says it has distributed more than 110,000 information booklets in various businesses around Dublin and elsewhere in Ireland and that this has resulted in an 85pc drop in drug-related crime.

Latest figures from the Central Statistics Office (CSO) show a decline in drug crime — about 7pc in the past 12 months — but nothing like the 85pc drop claimed in the video.

Among the businesses mentioned is a well-known and reputable pub in Temple Bar.

Last night a spokesman for the pub said he had “no knowledge” of the group distributing information from the bar.

A popular hair studio said it allowed Scientologists to film on its premises on the promise that the company’s name would not be included and that the video would not appear online.

FAKED

The video also portrays interviews done by the group on BBC Radio Foyle in the north and Ocean FM in the north-west as well as pieces in a number of regional newspapers.

Both radio stations said the interviews had been faked.

“The BBC is an independent, impartial organisation. Any misuse of its brand is considered a serious matter and will be investigated,” a spokesperson for BBC Radio Foyle said.

Niall Delaney from Ocean FM described the interview and the depiction of the station’s studio as “bogus”.

Despite several attempts to make contact with the group, nobody from the Church of Scientology spoke to the Irish Independent last night.

When taken to task by Ocean FM about the “interview” in the video, Scientologist Zabrina Shortt claimed the group had “re-enacted” an earlier interview with the station.